5 Questions: The Effects of Military's Ultimatum in Egypt

Reconciliation of the parties, at this point, means either the resignation of President Morsi or an early election for the presidency.


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5 Questions The Effects of Military's Ultimatum in Egypt
For Uyghurs Today is Again Worse than Yesterday

For Uyghurs Today is Again Worse than Yesterday

As the fourth anniversary of the 2009 events in Urumqi and the holy month of Ramadan are approaching, East Turkestan is once again beginning to relive these events to which we have become accustomed without even realizing it.


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The debate on the role and influence of the BRICS in global politics are increasing every day. However, what is lacking in this debate is that the focus is always on economic level.

It is possible to say that the Mohammed Morsi government in Egypt is about to end. However, a power struggle in which the Muslim Brotherhood is to play the leading actor of the political future of the country has just begun.

As Rouhani is a moderate man of reconciliation and dialogue, expectations about adopting a different line of politics in Iran have increased both inside and outside.

The votes to the Alliance for Employment, Prosperity and Integration led by the Democratic Party (DP) of Albania remaining around 40 percent mean that the 2-term PD ruling is soon to end in the country.

5 Questions: The Iraq Elections

The 2013 local elections in Iraq give an idea about the general elections to be held in 2014 in terms of both the results and the alliances to be formed.


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5 Questions The Iraq Elections
Taksim in-Between Spontaneity and Conspiracy

Taksim in-Between Spontaneity and Conspiracy

The Syria crisis, among else, became a mechanism to tame Turkey’s self-confidence in the region. Similarly, the riots in Taksim and elsewhere in the 2nd phase were used by some regional and global actors to give a clear warning to Turkey.


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Abdullah Yegin*: The possibility of fine calculated moves of the Ayetollah should not be overlooked.

Hezbollah will face its real crisis when it completes its transformation from a respected regional actor to a lonely actor.

Most of the evaluations that have been made by the media and political circles regarding Turkish foreign policy in Syria have three characteristics in common: They are void of Syria, baseless and conspiratorial.

What Russia understands from a political solution is the Kadirov model and what Iran understands from the political solution is a scenario of “forever-negotiation-nihilism” as it is the case in its nuclear program. Is either to propose a realistic political solution to the Syrian crisis?